You see, the affable Englishman with the long locks still plays his beloved set of Nike irons, even though the company got out of the golf equipment game a couple of years ago. If he breaks or loses one, there is no recourse. He even tried unsuccessfully to buy a set that Paul Casey had sitting in his garage, his countryman joking that they have become as rare as "rocking horse poo."

So when the hosels on a couple of irons bent from wear and tear at the WGC-Mexico Championship, there was no Nike trailer waiting to fix them. Shipping them out was out of the question, too.

"At least it was 7 and 8 irons, so you can kind of work around that," Fleetwood said. "Mid-irons are all right. You can go soft or hard with the ones in between. It would have been worse if it was like a wedge or something maybe. But it didn't cause too many problems. I think there was like a couple of clubs that I might have needed one, but it was all right. I got by just fine."

“The atmosphere yesterday was almost like a Saturday. All the majors are similar, but this one in particular seems to have a great atmosphere all the way through the week.” -@TommyFleetwood1pic.twitter.com/nKZpEmsHI5

He's been getting along just fine for a couple of years now, slowly climbing the world ranking to his current perch just outside the top 10. He won twice on the European Tour last year and captured the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship in January to keep the hot streak going.

The next step is winning on the PGA Tour. Or winning a major championship.

He could do both at Bellerive.

Fleetwood is among the favorites to win the PGA Championship this week, a reflection of the way he has performed since missing the cut at The Players Championship. He shot a blistering final-round 63 to finish second at the U.S. Open, used a second-round 65 to finish tied for 12th at the British Open and strung together three rounds in the 60s for a top-10 result at the Canadian Open.

Last weekend, he opened with 66-63 at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational to take the second-round lead, only to fade with a pair of rounds in the 70s to finish well back of winner Justin Thomas.

"Without a doubt, the next step in my career is to win in America and so on and so forth, win a major. So whether it will be winning the PGA or winning a regular tour event, it would be sort of the next step," he said. "I feel like the tougher challenges, the tougher courses have suited me this year whilst I've been on my game and I've been playing well."

The PGA Championship has a habit of crowning winners that are relatively new to the scene.

Jeff Sluman won for the first time at Oak Tree in 1988. John Daly turned the trick three years later, when he won at Crooked Stick as the ninth and final alternate. Shaun Micheel's only PGA Tour win remains his victory at Oak Hill in 2003, and Martin Kaymer turned European Tour success into his first win in the United States when he triumphed at Whistling Straits in 2010.

"At the end of the day, a lot of careers are defined on major championships," Fleetwood said. "You know, you could win five times in a year and not win a major, and some people would think, 'Well, you haven't won a major' — for some of the elite anyway. So you have to keep things in perspective."

He's one of the most easygoing players you'll find, the kind of everyman with a quick smile and equally quick wit that's so endearing to fans. Need proof? The protective case on his cellphone was covered by a grinning picture of Thomas Bjorn, the European captain for next month's Ryder Cup.

Not that Fleetwood needs to butter Bjorn up. He's a near-lock to make the team.

Especially if he finds himself in contention at another major championship come Sunday.

"Since I've been playing well, and particularly since I've been playing well in the majors, I tend to look at them more and I have a sense of confidence and belief that I totally can get over the line and win one," he said. "Yeah, it's part of the plan."